Dallas police arrested four people Saturday for accepting bribes in exchange for entry to the Texas-Oklahoma football game.

Darren Lewis, Michael Wesley, Rochelle Cade and David Carolina were working as ticket-takers at Cotton Bowl Stadium and accepted a range of money from undercover officers who later busted them for service theft, according to police reports.

Carolina, 49, was working outside Gate A when he told an undercover officer he could get him in without a ticket for $200. The officer asked if his three friends could get in too. Carolina agreed, took the $200 and pointed to Cade, 59, and said to enter through her gate. Police said Cade signaled to the officers to come through the gate when her supervisor wasn’t looking. She handed them programs and let them in.

At 9:54 a.m., two undercover officers approached Wesley. One officer said, “Hey man, can you let me and my girl in?” and showed him a $100 bill. Wesley looked around for his boss and said “Ya, hustle through man.” Police arrested him but couldn’t get the money back because Wesley said he “threw” it.

An hour later, another two officers approached Lewis, 19, who was working for Platinum Security taking tickets and asked, “Is this the cash gate?” and flashed $60. Lewis said yes, took the money and let them in without tickets. He was arrested and the money retrieved.

Lewis, Wesley and Cade are being held in lieu of $500 bond.

Dallas police said, in all, the suspects deprived the State Fair of Texas of $880 worth of valid tickets, valued at $110 each.

Federal immigration agents walked Oghenero Peter Toritseju Aluya to Terminal E at the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport with a one-way ticket to Nigeria.

It was April 29, the day of his scheduled removal from the U.S., as a result of a judge’s order.

But this trip did not go as planned.

Aluya refused to board the plane and instead tried to drop to the ground and began shouting that he was not going back to Nigeria, according to a federal complaint filed this week.

He is now charged in federal court in Dallas with failing to comply with a removal order.

Aluya arrived in Dallas in January 2011 with a valid Nigerian passport and a student visa to attend Cameron University in Lawton, Okla, according to the complaint.

Seven months later, Lawton police arrested him on a first-degree rape charge. He later pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and battery and received a 10-year deferred sentence, with the requirement that he serve the first 90 days behind bars.

As a result of that felony conviction, Aluya’s student visa was terminated and he ended up in federal immigration court. In September 2012, a federal immigration judge ordered him removed from the country.

In April, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents escorted Aluya to the airport terminal to place him on a Delta Airlines flight to Nigeria.

“Aluya shook his head from left to right and stated that he would not go back to Nigeria,” the complaint said. “Aluya proceeded to ‘drop’ his weight towards the ground and began yelling at the top of his voice that he was not going back to Nigeria.”

Original post on Sunday, March 24 at 6:34 p.m.: An Arlington man was shot and killed during a robbery at a Papa John’s in Tulsa, Okla., on Saturday, WFAA-TV (Channel 8) reports.

Robert Horton, 53, was delivering supplies to the pizza shop early Saturday morning, according to WFAA. Police said in several news accounts that Horton was caught in a robbery gone bad, and was shot multiple times in the chest.

Police haven’t arrested anyone in the case yet, WFAA reports.

Family members told Fox 4 that Horton had worked out of the Papa John’s distribution center in Grand Prairie for more than seven years.